LONDON -- Inquests into the deaths of 56 people in London's July 2005
suicide bombings will probe alleged failings by police and MI5 intelligence
before the attacks, the coroner conducting the hearings said Friday.

Judge Heather Hallett also ruled that inquests into four suicide bombers will
be held separately from those of the 52 victims, a relief to families who had
protested plans to hold the inquests together.

The suicide bombers set off near-simultaneous explosions on three London Underground
trains and a double-decker bus on the morning of July 7, 2005, in what has become
known as 7/7, nearly four years after the 9/11 attacks in the United States.

Hallett, giving details of arrangements for the inquests due to start in October,
said they would probe what police and MI5 officers knew ahead of the shock attacks.

"The scope of the inquest into the 52 deaths will include the alleged
intelligence failings and the immediate aftermath of the bombings," she
said.

"To my mind it is not too remote to investigate what was known in the
year or two before the alleged bombings. Plots of this kind are not developed
overnight," she added.

"We have been very concerned that there were serious failings and it seems
that this is the case... We are relieved that someone independent of Government
is going to examine what happened.

"We put all our faith in the coroner to do that, so if anything did go
wrong it can be fixed."

Hallett also announced that the inquests will not be held with a jury, and
that the hundreds of people injured in the attacks will not be designated "interested
person" status -- granting the right to cross-examine witnesses.

Survivors of the bombings voiced disappointment. "Once again we have been
shunted aside by officialdom and those questions may or may not be answered,"
said Jacqui Putnam, who survived the Edgware Road blast.

The 7/7 attacks struck during the rush hour on a Thursday morning, as British
Prime Minister Tony Blair was meeting with Group of Eight (G8) counterparts
for a summit in Gleneagles, Scotland.

Hasib Hussain, 18, detonated his device on board a number 30 bus at Tavistock
Square at 9.47 am. As well as the dead, some 700 people were injured in the
blasts.

It later emerged that intelligence services had followed the bombers' ringleader,
Khan, in early 2004 during an investigation into extremists planning a fertiliser
bomb plot.

As well as interrupting the G8 meeting in Scotland, the bombings also shattered
a sense of euphoria in London from a decision the previous day to stage the
2012 Olympic Games in the British capital.

Two weeks after July 7 there was an apparent attempt at a copycat simultaneous
attack, but the devices involved failed to go off. In the rush to find the plotters
police mistakenly shot and killed an innocent Brazilian man.

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